Antisemitism in the Aftermath of October 7th
Panel discussion moderated by Arno Rosenfeld
Tue, Apr 30, 2024
6 P.M. ET
Capital Jewish Museum 575 3rd Street, NW, Washington, D.C.
THANKS TO ALL WHO JOINED US!
This event was not recorded.
Join Washington, D.C.’s Capital Jewish Museum for a dynamic panel discussion examining the current state of antisemitism in the United States. Expert panelists will discuss the debate over antisemitism within Jewish communities, the implications of these divisions, and where we go from here.
Panelists include Matthew E. Berger, President and CEO of Mashber Strategies, Arie Dubnov, Chair of Israel Studies at George Washington University, and Emily Tamkin, journalist and author of Bad Jews. Moderated by Arno Rosenfeld, enterprise reporter for the Forward.
This event is hosted by the Capital Jewish Museum.
Engage
Upcoming Events
-
Fri, May 17, 2024 Cleveland, Ohio / ZOOM
-
Antisemitism on Campus and Throughout History
Sun, May 19, 2024 ZOOM -
“More Than We Expected: Five Years With a Remarkable Child”
Thu, May 23, 2024 Scotch Plains, New Jersey -
Meet Benyamin Cohen, Forward news director and author of The Einstein Effect on his book tour
Mon, May 27, 2024 - Fri, July. 5, 2024 Across the U.S. / ZOOM
Most Popular
- 1
Forverts in English A Yiddish word I never expected to see on a license plate
- 2
News ‘No one’s allowed to talk to me’: At UW-Madison, trying — and failing — to talk about Israel
- 3
News A ‘quite religious’ anti-Zionist: Meet the Jewish Columbia student who wrangled the college newspaper’s opinion page
- 4
Fast Forward New poll: 13% of voters who switched support from Biden cite his Gaza policy
In Case You Missed It
-
Opinion Anti-Zionism forced us to withdraw from Reconstructionist Rabbinical College
-
Fast Forward Could a Jewish voter surge threaten Jamaal Bowman’s reelection?
-
Fast Forward Lily Greenberg Call, Jewish staffer who quit Biden administration over Israel policy: ‘There are so many of us who feel this way’
-
Opinion I was expelled from Columbia for my activism in ’68. Here’s what student activists need to focus on next